Endocrinology for the Surgeon Dr. Jeremy Gilbert Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Objectives By the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: • Review diagnosis.

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Transcript Endocrinology for the Surgeon Dr. Jeremy Gilbert Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre Objectives By the end of this presentation, participants will be able to: • Review diagnosis.

Endocrinology for the Surgeon
Dr. Jeremy Gilbert
Sunnybrook Health
Sciences Centre
Objectives
By the end of this presentation, participants will be
able to:
• Review diagnosis and treatment of thyroid
emergencies
• Discuss diagnosis and management of adrenal
insufficiency
– Focus on steroid tapering
• Review workup for adrenal incidentaloma
– Focus on pheochromocytoma
• Discuss an approach to hypercalcemia diagnosis
and management
Case #1
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66 y.o. woman for elective cholecystectomy
Type 1 Diabetes and hypertension
Rx: Ramipril 5 mg, Insulin
Post Op Day 1 develops Temperature 38.7, HR
125 bpm (sinus), and confusion
• What is the differential diagnosis, most likely
diagnosis and management
Differential Diagnosis
– Hypoglycemia
– Hypoxia
– Pulmonary embolism
– Myocardial ischemia
– Sepsis
– Alcohol withdrawal
– Atelectasis
– Malignant hyperthermia/neuroleptic
malignant syndrome
Thyroid Storm- Definition
• Rare, life threatening condition manifesting as
exaggeration of thyrotoxicosis
• Usually patients have underlying
hyperthyroidism with an acute precipitant
(surgery, trauma, infection)
• Maybe related to poor compliance and low
SES
• CLINICAL DIAGNOSIS (NOT LABORATORY)
Uptodate
2012
Sensitive
Not Specific
Thyroid Storm- Investigations
• Clinical exam- goitre, proptosis, tremor
• Suppressed TSH, elevated FT4 and FT3
• Higher BS (catecholamine), Calcium (increased
bone metabolism)
• WBC- elevated or reduced
• Abnormal liver enzymes
• Do not wait for imaging (u/s, RAIU and scan)
to make diagnosis!
Thyroid Storm- Management
• Monitored Setting (10-30% mortality rate)
• Same as for hyperthyroidism, except meds
given in higher doses, more often
• Treat comorbidities (eg. infection)
• Supportive care- tylenol, cooling blanket,
fluids or diuretics
Thyroid Storm- Management
• Beta-blocker to decrease adrenergic tone
– Propanolol 60-80 mg q 4-6 h depending on HR, BP
• 1 mg iv q 10 mins
• A thionamide to block new hormone synthesis
– PTU 200 mg q 4 hrs
• An iodine solution to block the release of thyroid
hormone AT LEAST ONE HOUR AFTER THIONAMIDE
– Lugol’s solution 10 drops tid
• Steroids to reduce T4-to-T3 conversion, promote
vasomotor stability, and possibly treat an associated
relative adrenal insufficiency
– Hydrocortisone 100 mg tid
Thyroid Storm
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Suspect it
Review History
Complete Physical Exam
Appropriate blood work
Management
Case #2
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83 yo F found at home with decreased LOC
Very drowsy
BP 100/60, P 48, Temp 34.3, O2 sat 96% RA, BG: 5.1
Chest clear, HS: distant
Swollen ankles
GCS 9/15
PERL, face symmetrical, no papilledema
Withdraws all 4 limbs
Plantars downgoing
Neck not stiff
Differential Diagnosis
• “Metabolic” coma
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Hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, hypoxia,
Hypotension, hypertension, hypothermia
Organ failure (liver, renal, pulmonary, other ???)
Drug intoxication / withdrawal
Electrolyte abnormalities ([Na], [Ca], [Mg], [PO4],
[H+])
Subarachnoid hemorrhage, encephalitis/meningitis
Sepsis
Postictal
Endocrine: hypopit, hypoadrenal, hypothyroid
Myxedema Coma
• Severe hypothyroidism with multiple systems
involved
• Rare, high mortality
• Usually from chronic untreated
hypothyroidism or acute precipitant
– Meds (opioids), Infection, MI, Cold exposure
• Most common in older individuals, especially
women
Myxedema Coma- Presentation
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Decreased LOC (often not coma)
Hypothermia
Hyponatremia
Hypotension
Hypoglycemia
Hypoventilation
Bradycardia
Puffiness- myxedema- mucin deposits
Myxedema Coma- Diagnosis
• Look for thryoid scar or history of RAI
• Perform thyroid function tests and check
cortisol
Adrenal Disorders
Prepared by: Drs Jeannette Goguen,
Robert Silver and Jeremy Gilbert
Case 3
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A 25 yo woman is brought to ER:
c/o vomiting, diarrhea and abdominal pain x 24 hrs.
Decreased appetite, lost 5 kgs involuntarily
Significant dizziness on arising
Retained her “suntan” from the previous summer
Case 3 continued . . .
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O/E: she looks chronically unwell
HR120/minute; BP is 90/60 supine and 60/30 upright
Her JVP is not visible
Diffuse abdominal tenderness with no peritoneal
signs
• Large, dark freckles over her cheeks and darkened
palmer creases
• Large patches of vitiligo
• Preliminary labs: Na=125, K= 5.2, glucose = 2.5.
1. What is the likeliest diagnosis?
What is in your differential diagnosis?
1. What is the likeliest diagnosis?
What is in your differential diagnosis?
• The likeliest diagnosis:
• acute on chronic adrenal insufficiency presumably precipitated by an
acute viral gastroenteritis.
• The differential of weight loss and malaise is very broad, and
includes:
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Malignancy
Endocrine: Diabetes mellitus, thyrotoxicosis
Organ failure (liver, kidney)
Inflammatory disorders
Infections (eg, TB)
This differential diagnosis of adrenal
insufficiency includes:
This differential diagnosis of adrenal
insufficiency includes:
• Autoimmune adrenalitis*** likeliest diagnosis
• Tuberculosis
• HIV-related infections including TB, HIV itself, CMV and
histoplasmosis
• Meningococcal septicemia with acute adrenal hemorrhage
(Waterehouse-Friedrichson syndrome)
• Adrenal hemorrhage secondary to anti-coagulant
• Anti-phospholipid antibody (APLA)
• Infiltrative disorders
• Metastatic malignancy
• Adrenal Leukodystrophy
2. What additional laboratory testing
would you order?
2. What additional laboratory testing
would you order?
• Other baseline labs:
– Creatinine 124
– Urea 10
– Hgb 98, increased lymphocytes and eosinophils
• Baseline cortisol = 88 nmol/L (next day)
• Baseline ACTH = 100 (normal < 20) (1 month later)
• Formal Cortrosyn stim test: 1 hr cortisol= 120 (next day)
– Cortisol level over 500-550 nmol/L at either baseline or 60 minutes
post-injection of Cortrosyn and
– A rise in Cortisol of 250 nmol/L above baseline. (baseline cortisol > 500
nmol/L rules out adrenal insufficiency)
• TFT’s with thyroid antibodies: TSH 10, +++anti-thyroid Ab
3. How would you differentiate primary from
secondary (pituitary failure) adrenal insufficiency (AI)?
3. How would you differentiate primary from
secondary (pituitary failure) adrenal insufficiency (AI)?
Primary AI
Hyperpigmentation? Yes
Other autoimmune Often
disorders
Evidence of pituitary No
insufficiency/mass
effect
Hyponatremia?
Yes
Hyperkalemia?
Yes
ACTH level
High
Secondary AI
No
Rarely
Maybe
Yes
No
Low
4. How would you acutely manage
this patient?
4. How would you acutely manage
this patient?
• IV fluids with normal saline and glucose running
wide open until BP has stabilized and
hypoglycemia has resolved
• Administration of 4-8 mg of IV Dexamethasone
once baseline ACTH and cortisol drawn, do
Cortrosyn Stimulation test
• DDAVP 1-2 ug iv or sc and sodium load when significantly low
baseline plasma Na < 120
• Once hemodynamically stable and able to eat,
stress dose steroid coverage can be aborted and
oral administration of Hydrocortisone can begin
5. What advice for long-term management of AI
would you give after discharge?
5. What advice for long-term management of AI
would you give after discharge?
• Hydrocortisone- 25 mg daily in split doses, try to reduce to
lowest tolerated dose, typically 10 mg QAM, 5 mg QPM
(dose is weight-dependent)
• Florinef- 0.1 mg daily
• Meds must be taken every day.
• For a mild febrile illness, double the dosage of
Hydrocortisone for 3 days then see doctor if still unwell.
• If persistently nauseated or vomiting, go immediately to a
local emergency room for intravenous glucocorticoid
steroid
• Get a Medic Alert bracelet
• Purchase injectable Dexamethasone for remote travelling
Steroids
• Glucocorticoid dosing equivalences
– cortisone acetate 25 mg
– hydrocortisone (Solucortef) 20 mg
– prednisone 5 mg
– methyl-prednisolone (Solumedrol) 4 mg
– dexamethasone (Decadron) 0.75 mg
Steroid tapering
• Steroids suppress the H-P-A axis based on duration,
potency, dose
– Likely if on prednisone 20 mg or its equivalent for more than
3 weeks or who looks Cushingoid
– Unlikely if on steroids for < 3 weeks or on alternate day
regimens
– Uncertain if prednisone 10-20 mg for < 3 weeks or
• If uncertain and going for surgery, it may be worth
checking their HPA axis via ACTH stim test
• Individuals vary in how tapering affects them (age,
ethnicity- slower in Blacks, elderly)
– Consider stability of disease and general health status
• Too expensive and not practical to be following cortisols
ACTH Stimulation test
• 250 mcg or 1 mcg of cosyntropin (ACTH) given
iv
• Measure cortisol before test, 30 mins and 60
mins
• If Cortisol > 500 nmol/L at any point, there is
no adrenal insufficiency
• If on steroids, must be dexamethasone
• Best done in am when cortisol should be
highest
Tapering- paucity of evidence
• 5 to 10 mg/day every one to two weeks from an initial
dose above 40 mg of prednisone or equivalent per day.
• 5 mg/day every one to two weeks at prednisone doses
between 40 and 20 mg/day.
• 2.5 mg/day every two to three weeks at
prednisone doses between 20 and 10 mg/day.
• 1 mg/day every two to four weeks at prednisone doses
between 10 and 5 mg/day.
• 0.5 mg/day every two to four weeks at prednisone
doses from 5 mg/day down. This can be achieved by
alternating daily doses, eg, 5 mg on day 1 and 4 mg on
day 2.
Tapering-alternate days
• If prednisone between 20-30 mg, can try
alternate days at 10 mg by reducing by 5 mg
every 1-2 weeks
• Decrease alternate day dose by 2.5 mg every
1-2 weeks until the alternate day dose is 0 mg
• Reduce the other dose as you would on a daily
regimen
Case 4:
• Mrs S is a 55 yo woman with kidney stones
who has been found to have a right 4 cm
adrenal mass on routine CT
• She has a past 1-year history of hypertension,
BP today is 165/108 on:
– Amlodipine 10 mg daily
– Ramipril 10 mg daily
1. What are your priorities regarding
the adrenal mass?
1. What are your priorities regarding
the adrenal mass?
• Is this a benign or malignant tumor?
• Is it hormone-secreting?
– Catecholamines
– Cortisol
– Aldosterone
– Estrogen or androgen
2. What do benign adenomas look
like on imaging?
2. What do benign adenomas look
like on imaging?
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Small (typically < 4 cm)
Regular shape, no hemorrhage or calcification
Lack of growth over time
Lipid-rich
Advanced answer: on CT, low Hounsfeld units
(< 10); rapid wash out of contrast (>50% in 10
minutes)
3. What lifestyle factors can contribute to
poorly controlled hypertension?
3. What lifestyle factors can contribute to
poorly controlled hypertension?
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Dietary: salt, alcohol, licorice
Lack of exercise
Obesity with sleep apnea
Over the counter meds: pseudoephedrine,
NSAIDs
• Cocaine, amphetamines
Case Continued. . .
• Mrs S has a family history of “dangerous
tumors” in the adrenal gland: both her father,
paternal uncle and cousin had these removed.
It had been recommended to her that she get
her urine tested for adrenaline and that she
consider genetic testing, but she has felt well
overall and has been too busy with her law
practice to get the testing done.
What are you concerned about?
What are you concerned about?
• Pheochromocytoma
What genetic syndromes are
associated with this disorder?
What genetic syndromes are
associated with this disorder?
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MEN 2A and 2B
Von Hippel Lindau
Advanced answer:
Neurofibromatosis type 1
Familial paraganglioma syndromes (mutations
in SDH genes)
What should you ask her on history?
What should you ask her on history?
• Triad: Spells with the 3 P’s:
– Headache (“pain”), palpitations, perspiration
• Symptoms associated with a neck mass
(Medullary thyroid cancer)
What would you look for on physical
exam?
What would you look for on physical
exam?
• BP in both arms, postural hypotension
• End-organ complications from hypertension
Advanced answer:
• Thyroid mass (MEN 2 A and B)
• Mucosal neuromas on lips, Marfanoid
habitus (MEN 2B)
• Retinal, cerebellar findings
(hemangioblastomas with vHL)
• Neuromas, café au lait markings (NF-1)
What lab tests would you do to confirm Dx?
What lab tests would you do to confirm Dx?
• 24 hour urine catecholamines, metanephrines and
creatinine (if negative, repeat with symptoms if gets spells,
but asymptomatic with first collection)
– Results: volume 2.5 L, creatinine 8 mmol/day
– Metanephrine normal
– Normetanephrine 29.3 (normal 0-3.3)
– Epinephrine < 10 (normal)
– Norepinephrine 5173 (normal 0-500)
Can do plasma metanephrine levels if available
Advanced answer:
– MIBG nuclear scan can be used to localize tumors of no
masses on adrenal imaging, or if suspect multiple tumors
(if familial condition)
– Genetic counseling/genetic testing/screen for other
associated tumors if suspect genetic disorder
What is definitive therapy and how
would you prep her?
What is definitive therapy and how
would you prep her?
• Surgery to remove the tumor.
• She will need adequate control of her blood pressure prior to
surgery with Phenoxybenzamine (non-competitive alphablocker) to avoid surges in blood pressure during surgery.
– Only for the 2 weeks before surgery, because of cost factors
– Use calcium channel blockers and competitive alpha-blockade (eg,
doxazosin) before then
Advanced answer:
• On Phenoxybenzamine:
– Increased salt intake to avoid significant postural hypotension
– If she becomes tacchycardic, she should receive beta-blockade, once
adequately alpha-blocked.
Case 5
• 75 yo M brought by EMS to ED as wife noted
patient had decreased LOC
• O/E dry MM, BP 100/50, HR 110
• Chest clear, Normal CVS, abdo Normal
• Ca+ 3.3, creatinine 125, albumin 29
• Management?
Symptoms
• Bones: fractures, osteoporosis, osteitis fibrosa,
arthritis
• Stones: renal stones, polyuria, polydypsia (DI),
nephrocalcinosis, renal insufficiency
• Groans: constipation, nausea, pancreatitis, peptic
ulcer disease, abdo pain
• Moans: lethargy, depression, fatigue, stupor, coma
• Neuromuscular: proximal muscle weakness,
myopathy
• Cardio: bradycardia, shortened QT, hyperT
What is your differential diagnosis?
• PTH Mediated
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1˚HPT: PTH adenoma/hyperplasia/carcinoma
3˚ HPT
Familial Hyopcalciuric Hypercalcemia (FHH)
Lithium
• Non-PTH Mediated
Hypercalcemia Ddx
• Non-PTH Mediated
• Malignancy
» PTHrP (SCC)
» Osteolysis (myeloma, breast Ca)
» 1-alpha hydroxylase of Vitamin D (lymphoma)
• Granulomatous Disease
• Drugs
» Vitamin D, A
» Calcium antacids (milk alkali)
» Thiazides
• Endocrinopathies: Adrenal insufficiency, Pheo,
Thyrotoxicosis, Paget’s (immobility)
Hypercalcemic Crisis: Rx
1. Volume: IV NS 300-500 cc/h (slower if elderly,
cardiac or renal disease)
2. Loop diuretic: Only give if ECFv overloaded. Lasix
20-40 mg IV q4-6h. Monitor I/O carefully, keep
patient in positive fluid balance
3. Replace electrolyte depletion from saline diuresis
as needed (K, Mg, Pi, etc.)
Hypercalcemic Crisis: Rx
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Calcitonin
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1 IU SC test dose: skin rxn by 15 min
4 IU/kg SC/IM q12h
If no response by 24-48h increase to max dose 8
IU/kg q6h
Rapid effect (begins 4-6h) but transient (2-3d) due to
tachyphylaxsis
Effective in 60-70% of cases, lowers Ca by 0.3-0.5
mmol/L
Hypercalcemic Crisis: Rx
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Bisphosphonates
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Pamidronate
– Ca < 3.0 mM: 30 mg in 500cc NS IV over 4h
– Ca > 3.0 mM: 60-90 mg in 500cc NS IV over 24h
Effect peaks @ 2-4d, lasts 1-6 wk (can retreat q1-6wk)
Can also use zoledronic acid
Steroids
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Useful in Vitamin D intoxication, granuloma, lymphoproliferative
disorders
Prednisone 40-80 mg/d
Takes 5-10d to see treatment effect
Hypercalcemic Crisis: Rx
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Obsolete treatments:
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Mithramycin: + + N/V & other toxicities
Gallium nitrate: nephrotoxic
Chelators: IV EDTA, IV or PO phosphate
• Consider dialysis
• Identify & Rx underlying cause of hypercalcemia!
TREATMENT- Summary
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FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
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Lasix
Other
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
FLUIDS
Summary of Objectives
• Review diagnosis and treatment of thyroid
emergencies
• Discuss diagnosis and management of adrenal
insufficiency
– Focus on steroid tapering
• Review workup for adrenal incidentaloma
– Focus on pheochromocytoma
• Discuss an approach to hypercalcemia
diagnosis and management
Thank you!!!!
QUESTIONS??????